Post-Route Alleviation of Dense Meander Segments in High-Performance Printed Circuit Boards
Tsun-Ming Tseng, Bing Li, Tsung-Yi Ho, Ulf Schlichtmann

TL;DR
This paper introduces a post-processing method to enlarge and distribute dense meander segments in high-performance PCB routing, reducing crosstalk and timing mismatches caused by speedup effects.
Contribution
It proposes an ILP-based framework to effectively enlarge and evenly distribute meander segments after initial routing, improving signal integrity.
Findings
Meander segments' width and distance can be doubled.
Crosstalk and speedup effects are significantly reduced.
Method works effectively under tight area constraints.
Abstract
Length-matching is an important technique to balance delays of bus signals in high-performance PCB routing. Existing routers, however, may generate dense meander segments with small distance. Signals propagating across these meander segments exhibit a speedup effect due to crosstalks between the segments of the same wire, thus leading to mismatch of arrival times even with the same physical wire length. In this paper, we propose a post-processing method to enlarge the width and the distance of meander segments and distribute them more evenly on the board so that the crosstalks can be reduced. In the proposed framework, we model the sharing combinations of available routing areas after removing dense meander segments from the initial routing, as well as the generation of relaxed meander segments and their groups in subareas. Thereafter, this model is transformed into an ILP problem and…
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See pages 1-last of Meander_Routing_ICCAD2013.pdf
